Microwave heating effects on degradation and migration of additives from polypropylene packaging
Sammanfattning: The effect of different food types, polymer qualities and microwaves on the overall and specific migration during microwave heating of plastic packaging was investigated to better understand the packaging-food interactions and the effect of microwaves on food packaging. This work focuses on the migration of chemical compounds to food simulants from commercially available polypropylene packages. Packages used were made of polypropylene homopolymer (PP), co-polymer (PP-C) and random co-polymer (PP-R). Polymers matrix changes were monitored by following possible changes in crystallinity after microwave heating. Antioxidants Irgafos 168 and Irganox 1010 were present in all the three PP packages. Other volatiles, primarily degradation products of antioxidants, were also detected and identified in the unaged packages. Significant antioxidant degradation took place during microwave heating of the packages in the fatty food simulants 90/10 isooctane/ethanol and ethanol resulting in the formation and migration of degradation products while no degradation of antioxidants was detected during conventional heating of the packages in the fatty food simulants. Antioxidant Irgafos 168 and Irganox 1010 migration rates were otherwise similar during microwave heating as during conventional heating to the fatty food simulants and antioxidant diffusion coefficients were similar to earlier established values obtained during conventional heating. Antioxidant migration rates from the three polymers to fatty food simulants differed largely with respect to PP type and increased with decreasing degree of crystallinity in the materials, PP-R showing the highest migration rate. Swelling in isooctane food simulant caused the antioxidant diffusion coefficients to increase by factors of 100-1000 at 80 ºC and decreased the temperature dependence of antioxidant migration. It also increased the overall migration to above established overall migration limits during both microwave and conventional heating. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was shown to be a valuable new tool for additive migration analysis of compounds not detectable by HPLC or GC-MS.
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